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Hawk Mountain Sanctuary

Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
Hawk.Mountain.NL.JPG
North Lookout toward the East, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
Map showing the location of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
Map showing the location of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
Location of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvania
Location Berks / Schuylkill counties, Pennsylvania, USA
Nearest city Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°38′27″N 75°59′32″W / 40.64083°N 75.99222°W / 40.64083; -75.99222Coordinates: 40°38′27″N 75°59′32″W / 40.64083°N 75.99222°W / 40.64083; -75.99222
Area 2,600 acres (11 km2)
Established 1934
Visitors 60,000 (in 2008)
Governing body Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association
www.hawkmountain.org

Hawk Mountain Sanctuary is a wild bird sanctuary in Albany Township and East Brunswick Township, located along the Appalachian flyway in eastern Pennsylvania. The sanctuary is a prime location for the viewing of kettling and migrating raptors with an average of 20,000 hawks, eagles and falcons passing the lookouts during the late summer and fall every year. The birds are identified and counted by staff and volunteers to produce annual counts of migrating raptors that represent the world's longest record of raptor populations. These counts have provided conservationists with valuable information on changes in raptor numbers in North America.

The Sanctuary is located on a ridge of Hawk Mountain, one of the Blue Mountain chain. The Visitor Center houses a shop and facilities with parking nearby. A habitat garden next to it is home to native plants that are protected by a deer fence. The 1 mile Lookout Trail runs from the Visitor Center to a number of raptor viewing sites along the ridge, the most popular being the close by South Lookout (elevation 1300 feet) and the North Lookout (elevation 1521 feet) with a 200 degree panoramic view that extends to 70 miles. Nine trails of varying difficulty are available to hikers and linked to the Appalachian Trail.

Located in the sanctuary is Schaumboch's Tavern, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

The area was a popular site for shooting hawks, either for sport or to prevent depredations on domestic fowl or game birds. In 1934, Rosalie Edge leased 1,400 acres (5.7 km2) of property on Hawk Mountain and hired wardens to keep the hunters away. The wardens were Maurice Broun and his wife Irma Broun, bird enthusiasts and conservationists from New England. Almost immediately, there was a noticeable recovery in the raptor population. In 1938, the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association was incorporated as a non-profit organization in Pennsylvania, and Edge purchased the property and deeded it to the association in perpetuity.


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